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The Mysterious Deaths of Experts Who Preserved Lenin's Body

The suspicious deaths of three prominent specialists involved in the embalming and preservation of Vladimir Lenin's body continue to puzzle historians.

The Kremlin's Enigma

Following Vladimir Lenin's death in 1924, the Soviet Union's leadership decided to preserve his body indefinitely. This decision, while historically and scientifically significant, later raised numerous questions, particularly concerning the unexplained deaths of the experts who worked directly with Lenin's remains.

Leonid Krasin: Trusted Associate and Visionary

Engineer and diplomat Leonid Krasin was a close confidant of Lenin. He supported the idea of embalming Lenin's body, believing in the possibility of future human resurrection. Krasin oversaw the work of Professors Rozanov and Weisbrod. However, just two years after Lenin's death, Krasin died suddenly during a business trip to London. The official cause was a heart attack due to chronic anemia. Notably, his body was cremated in London and not returned to his homeland.

Vladimir Vorobyov: The Controversial Anatomist

Professor Vladimir Vorobyov, an anatomist from Kharkiv, was a key figure in the project to preserve Lenin's body. His scientific methods also led to the involvement of biochemist Boris Zbarsky. Vorobyov's past was not without controversy; he had served under German administration in 1918 and provided conclusions related to mass burials of civilians, leading Soviet authorities to distrust him. Participating in Lenin's embalming helped restore his reputation. Despite successfully completing the task, Vorobyov died in 1937 following kidney surgery at a Kremlin hospital. The official cause was intolerance to anesthesia, but historians question this, given the intense political purges occurring in the Soviet Union at that time.

Aaron Zalkind: The Brain-Studying Psychologist

While less widely known, psychologist Aaron Zalkind also participated in the post-mortem research on Lenin. According to some accounts, he studied Lenin's brain and identified signs of syphilis, a conclusion that met with resistance from some colleagues. Letters from Dr. Zernov hint that Zalkind might have been punished for this finding. In one account, when asked about Zalkind at a scientific congress in Moscow, a translator stated he was not in the city. Shortly thereafter, the psychologist's body was found. Although the official cause of death was reported as a heart attack, the circumstances surrounding his demise remain shrouded in mystery.

The Kremlin's Secrets Remain Unsolved

The fates of Krasin, Vorobyov, and Zalkind are just a part of the enigmatic events connected to Lenin's body. Their lives intertwined science, politics, and inexplicable tragedies. Historians are still seeking definitive answers as to whether these events were mere coincidences or the consequences of the political climate and secret projects of that era. The archives of the Kremlin and the history of the mausoleum continue to be an unsolved mystery for many researchers.

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